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題名 Infants Attribute Goals to Acts Produced by Human and Object Agents
作者 Huang, Chi-Tai;Chen, Hsiao-Hua
黃啟泰
貢獻者 心理系
日期 2007
上傳時間 8-Apr-2015 16:09:43 (UTC+8)
摘要 A debate has been going as to whether infants` ability to represent acts in terms of goals is sensitive to motions performed by people only (the mirror neuron systems theory) or to a variety of cues through which infants apply the principle of rational action to both human and inanimate agents (the teleological stance theory). Solution to the above issue is timely and important (for notable examples, see Sommerville, Woodward and Needham, 2005 ; Biro and Leslie, 2006). Robotic scientists have begun to use such knowledge to design robots that mimic human biomechanical movements, to which infants are likely to attribute goals or intentions (Kamewari, Kato, Kanda, Ishiguro and Hiraki, 2005). Using an eye tracking technique (Tobii 1750), the study reported here presents an attempt to evaluate the mirror neuron systems theory (Gallese, Fadiga, Fogassi and Rizzolatti, 1996; Gallese, Keysers and Rizzolatti, 2004) and the teleological stance theory (Gergely and Csibra, 2003; Gergely, Nádasdt, Csibra and Bíró, 1995). The key question is whether 12-month-old infants were as likely to predict the goal-state of an action performed by a human agent as by an object agent under contexts of goal selection.
關聯 Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Epigenetic Robotics: Modeling Cognitive Development in Robotic Systems. Lund University Cognitive Studies, 135.
資料類型 conference
dc.contributor 心理系
dc.creator (作者) Huang, Chi-Tai;Chen, Hsiao-Hua
dc.creator (作者) 黃啟泰zh_TW
dc.date (日期) 2007
dc.date.accessioned 8-Apr-2015 16:09:43 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.available 8-Apr-2015 16:09:43 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 8-Apr-2015 16:09:43 (UTC+8)-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/74397-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) A debate has been going as to whether infants` ability to represent acts in terms of goals is sensitive to motions performed by people only (the mirror neuron systems theory) or to a variety of cues through which infants apply the principle of rational action to both human and inanimate agents (the teleological stance theory). Solution to the above issue is timely and important (for notable examples, see Sommerville, Woodward and Needham, 2005 ; Biro and Leslie, 2006). Robotic scientists have begun to use such knowledge to design robots that mimic human biomechanical movements, to which infants are likely to attribute goals or intentions (Kamewari, Kato, Kanda, Ishiguro and Hiraki, 2005). Using an eye tracking technique (Tobii 1750), the study reported here presents an attempt to evaluate the mirror neuron systems theory (Gallese, Fadiga, Fogassi and Rizzolatti, 1996; Gallese, Keysers and Rizzolatti, 2004) and the teleological stance theory (Gergely and Csibra, 2003; Gergely, Nádasdt, Csibra and Bíró, 1995). The key question is whether 12-month-old infants were as likely to predict the goal-state of an action performed by a human agent as by an object agent under contexts of goal selection.
dc.format.extent 229829 bytes-
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf-
dc.relation (關聯) Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Epigenetic Robotics: Modeling Cognitive Development in Robotic Systems. Lund University Cognitive Studies, 135.
dc.title (題名) Infants Attribute Goals to Acts Produced by Human and Object Agents
dc.type (資料類型) conferenceen